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The Internet

Russian Internet Giant Yandex Launches Its First Smartphone (venturebeat.com) 37

Russia's Yandex has launched its first ever smartphone as the company seeks to leverage its dominant position in apps and services into hardware sales. Yandex, which runs the most popular search engine in Russia, hopes its Yandex.Phone will bind users closer to its suite of products, from food delivery and taxi hailing apps to marketplace and music streaming platforms, as competition rises for online services. From a report: The Yandex.Phone is a 5.65-inch Android-powered phone that will cost 17,990 rubles ($270) when it goes on sale tomorrow. In terms of specifications, Yandex.Phone is a fairly mid-range device, sporting a Qualcomm Snapdragon 630 processor, 4GB of RAM, 64GB of expandable storage, and a 16-megapixel / 5-megapixel dual rear camera.

In place of Google Assistant, which is standard on most Android phones, the company is also pushing its own intelligent assistant, Alice. This isn't the first piece of Yandex hardware to sport Alice since it was unveiled in 2017 -- earlier this year, Yandex launched a $160 smart speaker that also included the virtual assistant. It's not entirely clear what the default apps on the phone will be, but judging by the official photos it seems pretty clear Yandex is positioning its own services at the forefront of the device and favoring its own search engine. That said, Google's apps are also bundled.

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Russian Internet Giant Yandex Launches Its First Smartphone

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  • Finally (Score:2, Funny)

    Finally a phone I can trust. And Alice sounds like a good idea too. Nothing possibly is bad about this, but I am sure some Slashdotter will try and spin it that way!
    • Alice is mostly useless, behaving more like a chat bot than a digital assistent.

      • Oh, just like Siri and Cortana or Google Assistant.
        • No, these have at least some uses like switching off the smart lights. Alice can't, but she can be sarcastic instead.

        • Are the lyrics to Jefferson Airplane's "Go Ask Alice" [lyricsmode.com] floating around in anyone else's head?
          (with mods....)

          One app makes you larger
          And our app makes you small
          And the ones that Vlady gives you
          Don't do anything at all

          Go ask Alice
          When she's ten feet tall
          And if you go chasing twitter
          And you know you're going to fall

          Tell them a hookah-smoking caterpillar
          Has given you the call
          Call Alice when she was just small
          When the men on the chess board get up and tell you where to go

          And you just launched some

  • Given the ease of planting spyware in modern smartphones and devices with Wifi and GPS (ergo contextual and situational knowledge + access), I'm not sure it is a good idea to trust devices from countries known to deliberately spy and hack sensitive networks in the USA.

    If you think NSA accessing Google/Facebook logs is scarier, think again.
  • I started using Yandex when it became obvious Google was biasing its results politically.

    As far as U.S. politics is concerned it looks like Yandex was probably neutral. Unfortunately as a Russian search engine, even though I was using the English interface it gave way too many Russian language results so I've mostly abandoned it for DuckDuckGo and Ecosia.

    Yandex, I have to say was solid and well made. I do believe there's more here than another "Fire Phone".

    • by Puls4r ( 724907 )
      They're a Russian company - in a country of companies not known for high tech consumer products. Next to China, and just a little way from Korea. Unless Yandex gets some major government protection, they'll either go under or be acting as someone's distributor pretty quickly.
    • by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Wednesday December 05, 2018 @01:55PM (#57753716)

      I started using Yandex when it became obvious Google was biasing its results politically.

      Yes, Putin is the most unbiased man in the world. Every country should have media controlled specifically by his cronies. Those Western people know not how magnificent and non-duplicitous Putin is.

      May Putin one day rule the world and we all live in perfect harmony.

    • I'm responding because I had similar reason to start using Yandex, but I don't relate to why you stopped using it.
      How is it so abnormal to have multilingual results when searching internet, a global multinational phenomena?
      I have to imagine most of rest of world has similar experience re: overabundance of EN, so what is problem?
      IME, vast majority of (2%) "Russian" Yandex results (I'm searching with Latin alphabet English terms, after all)
      are merely Russian version of sites like Wiki, which is the result of

      • It did seem to prefer Russian over English, even site versions, which I understand completely, they are offering a patch so I as an English speaker can use it, they are Russian at the core. I still use it some. I've often wondered how much it must suck to speak any language other than English and try to use the web. I know there's stuff out there for speakers of other languages, but English seems to be where it's at online.

        I understand DDG used to be more of what you're describing, but it's got it's own

  • For quality purposes this call may be recorded or monitored. You should try to be a quality person.

  • why not Ekaterina or Svetlana??? or Oksana?? they can leverage names that invoke sexy girls but no..........."alice" which invokes https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
  • by isny ( 681711 ) on Wednesday December 05, 2018 @01:09PM (#57753390) Homepage

    Alice is always one side of the alice->bob secure messaging.

  • Our phones watch YOU!

It appears that PL/I (and its dialects) is, or will be, the most widely used higher level language for systems programming. -- J. Sammet

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